First Woman May Be Cured of HIV Without a Bone Marrow Transplant – POZ
By daniellenierenberg
A California woman may be the first person to be cured of HIV without a bone marrow transplant, according to a recent report in Nature. More than 60 other so-called elite controllers, who have unusually potent immune responses to HIV, were found to have their virus sequestered in parts of their genome where it is unable to replicate.
The unusual case involves Loreen Willenberg, who acquired HIV in 1992. Her immune system has maintained control of the virus for decades without the use of antiretroviral treatment, and researchers have been unable to find any intact virus in more than 1.5 billion of her cells. Elite controllers are thought to make up less than half a percent of all people living with HIV.
I believe Loreen might indeed meet anyones definition of a cure, study coauthor Steven Deeks, MD, of the University of California at San Francisco, told POZ. Despite heroic efforts, we just could not find any virus that is able to replicate. Her immune system seems completely normal. Even her HIV antibodies levels are low, which is unprecedented in an untreated person.
Although antiretroviral therapy can keep HIV replication suppressed, the virus inserts its genetic material into the chromosomes of human cells, making it very difficult to eradicate. HIV can lie dormant in a reservoir of resting immune cells indefinitely, but when antiretrovirals are stopped and the cells become activated, they can start churning out new virus.
Previously, only two people were known to have been cured of HIV: Timothy Ray Brown, formerly know as the Berlin Patient, and a man in London. Both received bone marrow stem cell transplants from a donor with a rare genetic mutation that makes cells resistant to HIV entry. But this procedure is far too dangerous for people who dont need it to treat advanced cancer.
The new research suggests that Willenberg and some five dozen other people with long-term untreated HIV have their virus hidden away in their cells genomes in such as way that the viral genetic blueprint (known as a provirus) cant be used to produce new viral particles that can go on to infect other cells.
Xu Yu, MD, of the Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital, MIT and Harvard analyzed integrated HIV in millions of cells from 64 elite controllers and 41 typical HIV-positive people on antiretroviral therapy recruited at Mass General and San Francisco General Hospital.
In both groups, about 20% were women, the average age was approximately 56, they had been living with HIV for an average of 17 years and had undetectable virus according to standard tests for nine years. Overall, the elite controllers had a higher average CD4 count (about 900 versus 70, respectively).
The researchers used next-generation gene sequencing to characterize the participants viral blueprints, including where they were inserted into human chromosomes. They found that the elite controllers had fewer integrated proviruses, but a larger proportion of them were intact, or potentially capable of replicating. The virus in these individuals was highly consistent, without the wide variety of mutations seen in most people with HIV.
Whats more, their proviruses were integrated at distinct sites in the human genome, farther away from elements that enable viral replication. Specifically, the integrated DNA was not located near sites that switch on transcription or close to accessible chromatin, which contains histone proteins that package long DNA strands into a more compact form. The DNA must then be unwound from these proteins before it can be used to produce new virus.
These data suggest that a distinct configuration of the proviral reservoir represents a structural correlate of natural viral control, and that the quality, rather than the quantity, of viral reservoirs can be an important distinguishing feature for a functional cure of HIV-1 infection, Yu and colleagues wrote.
In a commentary accompanying the report, Nicolas Chomont, PhD, of the University of Montreal, characterized the proviruses in these elite controllers as being in a state of deep sleep compared with latent virus in typical people with HIV. This has only become apparent now because researchers have more sophisticated tools to pinpoint the location of proviruses within the genome.
It is unclear why this block and lock phenomenon happens in only a small proportion of people with HIV. Its possible that the virus ends up sequestered in these locations by chance. But the researchers think its more likely that the integrated proviruses at these sites are evolutionarily selected over time as the ones in locations more conducive to viral replication are eliminated by the immune system.
In Willenbergs case, the research team analyzed more than 1.5billion of her peripheral blood immune cells, including samples from gut tissue, where the virus often hides. Theycould not find any intact proviruses that could be used to produce new HIV. Given her absence of intact proviruses, the researcherswere unable to determine whether she ever fit the pattern of having latent HIV locked away in inaccessible locations.
Another 11 people, dubbed exceptional controllers, only had detectableprovirusesatremote sites in the genome where it could not replicate.Since this study, the researchers have discovered a couple more elite controllers who may qualify as additional cures, according to the New York Times.
This raises the possibility that a sterilizing cure of HIVmeaning complete eradicationmay be feasible in rare instances, the study authors suggested. A similar but less complete process may be at play in the subset of about 10% of people with HIV who maintain viral suppression after stopping antiretroviral therapy but who still have detectable proviruses (known as post-treatment controllers).
This research was first presented at the International AIDS Society Conference on HIV Science last summer, where Willenberg was referred to as the San Francisco Patient. Willenberg later went public with her status, and she and Yu discussed the study findings during a webinar with HIV cure advocates last November.
I broke out in tears when saw Dr. Yus final slide, said Willenberg, who over the years has participated in more than a dozen studies. I can only hope and pray that with continued dedication we can figure out how I have dumped the virus into the DNA junkyard.
The question now is whether its possible to develop treatments that could enable the millions of typical people with progressive HIV to become elite controllers like Willenberg. Chomont suggested that immune-based therapiesincluding CAR-T cellsmight be able to shrink the viral reservoir until it consists only of deeply latent proviruses that are unable to replicate.
The key question is how did her immune system achieve this remarkable state, Deeks said. We do not know. We need to find more people who are exceptional controllers like Loreen and get to work on figuring out the mechanism.
In this video fromamfAR, the Foundation for AIDS Research,Loreen Willenbergtalks about living as an elite controller of HIV.
Click here to read the Nature article.Click here for more news about HIV cure research.
See original here:
First Woman May Be Cured of HIV Without a Bone Marrow Transplant - POZ
- Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation - StatPearls - NCBI ... - January 22nd, 2025
- Doctors retrieve stem cells from 20-month-old to treat thalassaemic sister - The Times of India - January 22nd, 2025
- YolTech Therapeutics to Initiate a Clinical Trial for YOLT-204, a First-in-Class Bone Marrow-Targeted In Vivo Gene Editing Therapy for -Thalassemia -... - January 22nd, 2025
- School of Medicine professor receives grant to study improved cancer treatments - Mercer University - January 14th, 2025
- 1st stem cell therapy, new HIV drug approved - ecns - January 5th, 2025
- Suppression of thrombospondin-1mediated inflammaging prolongs hematopoietic health span - Science - January 5th, 2025
- A pilot raced through the airport to surprise an old friend: the woman who saved his life - CNN - December 27th, 2024
- Types of Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Transplants - December 27th, 2024
- Explained: What is mesenchymal stem cell therapy? - Drug Discovery News - December 18th, 2024
- Stem Cell Transplants Offer New Hope for Saving the Worlds Corals - Technology Networks - December 18th, 2024
- Scientists Present Research on Novel Cancer Therapies at ASH - City of Hope - December 18th, 2024
- Navigating CAR-T cell therapy long-term complications - Nature.com - December 18th, 2024
- High-dose chemotherapy followed by autologous stem cell transplant ineffective for patients with mantle cell lymphoma - News-Medical.Net - December 18th, 2024
- Stem Cell Therapy Market Is Expected To Reach Revenue Of - GlobeNewswire - December 18th, 2024
- The Importance of Cellular Therapy in the Clinical Case of a Young Man With a Challenging Precursor B-cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia - Cureus - December 18th, 2024
- A search for the perfect match, Apex six year old in need of donor - CBS17.com - December 18th, 2024
- New insights into survival of breast cancer cells in the bone marrow - News-Medical.Net - December 9th, 2024
- Cellular trafficking and fate mapping of cells within the nervous system after in utero hematopoietic cell transplantation - Nature.com - December 9th, 2024
- Saving lives, one stem cell at a time - Texas A&M The Battalion - December 9th, 2024
- Turn Biotechnologies Announces Landmark Study to Assess Effectiveness of ERA Therapy in Restoring Bone Marrow - PR Newswire UK - December 9th, 2024
- Orca Bio Presents Three-Year Survival Data with Orca-T in Patients with Hematological Malignancies at the 66th ASH Annual Meeting - Yahoo Finance - December 9th, 2024
- You are the match. How UNC student honored her late grandfather with life-saving effort - Raleigh News & Observer - November 29th, 2024
- scRNA-seq revealed transcriptional signatures of human umbilical cord primitive stem cells and their germ lineage origin regulated by imprinted genes... - November 29th, 2024
- Atlanta pilot with an aggressive cancer finds lifesaving help from a stranger and a simple test - The Atlanta Journal Constitution - November 29th, 2024
- Researchers have brought the promise of stem cell therapies closer to reality - The Week - November 29th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Donors Can Be Hard to Find. One Company Is Turning to ... - November 15th, 2024
- Hematopoietic Stem Cells and Their Niche in Bone Marrow - November 15th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Transplant Program - Overview - Mayo Clinic - November 15th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Donors Can Be Hard to Find. One Company Is Turning to Cadavers - WIRED - November 15th, 2024
- More stem cells for sickle cell gene therapy readied with motixafortide - Sickle Cell Disease News - November 15th, 2024
- Skull bone marrow expands throughout life and remains healthy during aging, researchers discover - Medical Xpress - November 15th, 2024
- Adult skull bone marrow is an expanding and resilient haematopoietic reservoir - Nature.com - November 15th, 2024
- Evaluation of standard fludarabine dosing and corresponding exposures in infants and young children undergoing hematopoietic cell transplantation -... - November 15th, 2024
- Stem cells grown in space show super powers but theres a catch - Study Finds - November 15th, 2024
- Getting a Stem Cell or Bone Marrow Transplant - October 21st, 2024
- Acquisition of durable insulin-producing cells from human adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a foundation for cell- based therapy of... - October 21st, 2024
- 1.5 Lakh Indians Register To Save Lives: Join the Mission To Fight Blood Cancer - The Better India - October 21st, 2024
- How Stem Cell and Bone Marrow Transplants Are Used to Treat Cancer - October 13th, 2024
- Stem Cell (Bone Marrow) Transplants - MD Anderson Cancer Center - October 13th, 2024
- Donating Bone Marrow and Stem Cells: The Process and What To Expect - October 13th, 2024
- What to expect as a stem cell or bone marrow donor - October 13th, 2024
- Structural organization of the bone marrow and its role in ... - October 13th, 2024
- Stem cell donor from down the road saved my life after global search - BBC.com - September 23rd, 2024
- Awaiting the call: family hopes to find blood stem cell donor - Claremont Courier - September 23rd, 2024
- Michigan woman one of first in world to successfully receive bone marrow from deceased donor - WDIV ClickOnDetroit - September 23rd, 2024
- Next-generation stem cell transplant: Revolutionizing a lifesaving cancer therapy - The Business Journals - September 23rd, 2024
- Sophie's life was saved by a stranger. Some in her position have an 'unfair' disadvantage - SBS News - September 23rd, 2024
- What Are Leukemia and Lymphoma and How Are They Treated? - LVHN News - September 23rd, 2024
- Giralt on MDS Transplant Timing and Candidacy - Targeted Oncology - September 14th, 2024
- Aging is associated with functional and molecular changes in distinct hematopoietic stem cell subsets - Nature.com - September 14th, 2024
- A practical guide to therapeutic drug monitoring in busulfan: recommendations from the Pharmacist Committee of the European Society for Blood and... - September 14th, 2024
- ISU researcher blown away by blood cell replication discovery - Radio Iowa - September 14th, 2024
- Pausing biological clock could give boost to lab-produced blood stem cells - Phys.org - September 14th, 2024
- 9-year-old gets successful bone marrow transplant - The Times of India - September 14th, 2024
- Dr. Crandall: Stem Cell Treatment Heals the Heart - Newsmax - September 3rd, 2024
- Orion Corporation: Managers’ transactions – Hao Pan - August 19th, 2024
- BioCorRx Reports Business Update for the Second Quarter of 2024 - August 19th, 2024
- Tevogen Bio Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results, Eliminates Doubt About Company’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern, Eliminates... - August 19th, 2024
- Aligos Therapeutics Announces Reverse Stock Split - August 19th, 2024
- Lumos Pharma to Participate in H.C. Wainwright 26th Annual Global Investment Conference - August 19th, 2024
- Protect Pharmaceutical Corp. (PRTT) Announces New CEO and New Director; Moves to Finalize the Karinca Logistics Merger - August 19th, 2024
- OKYO Pharma Participates in H.C. Wainwright 4th Annual Ophthalmology Virtual Conference - August 19th, 2024
- CORRECTION – Tevogen Bio Reports Second Quarter 2024 Financial Results, Eliminates Doubt About Company’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern,... - August 19th, 2024
- NurExone Biologic Achieves Key Milestone in Support of Robust Exosome Manufacturing Process - August 19th, 2024
- Silexion Therapeutics Ltd. and Moringa Acquisition Corp Announce Closing of their Business Combination - August 19th, 2024
- Vericel Announces FDA Approval of NexoBrid for the Treatment of Pediatric Patients with Severe Thermal Burns - August 19th, 2024
- Codexis Publishes FY2023 Sustainability Disclosures - August 19th, 2024
- MediWound Announces U.S. Food and Drug Administration Approval of NexoBrid® for the Treatment of Pediatric Patients with Severe Thermal Burns - August 19th, 2024
- First Successful Paediatric Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplant In Bengaluru; Know All About The Procedure - Onlymyhealth - August 4th, 2024
- Is Stem Cell Transplant Often The Only Treatment Option For Blood Cancer Patients? Why So? - News18 - June 2nd, 2024
- This Swedish startup wants to reduce the cost, and controversy, around stem cell production - TechCrunch - March 10th, 2024
- Bone Marrow Transplantation | Johns Hopkins Medicine - December 20th, 2023
- Mansour bin Zayed witnesses inauguration of ADSCC Bone Marrow Transplant & Cellular Therapy Congress 2023 - ZAWYA - November 26th, 2023
- ADSCC Bone Marrow Transplant and Cellular Therapy Congress 2023 to take place in Abu Dhabi - ZAWYA - November 18th, 2023
- Orchard Therapeutics Reports First Quarter 2023 Financial Results and Announces Initiation of Rolling Submission for Biologics License Application of... - May 16th, 2023
- Family of 7-month-old in need of bone marrow transplant hosting donor registration event - CBS Pittsburgh - May 8th, 2023
- Anika Continues to Expand Addressable Market for Tactoset Injectable Bone Substitute with Additional 510(k) Clearance from FDA - Marketscreener.com - April 5th, 2023
- MorphoSys Completes Enrollment of Phase 3 MANIFEST-2 Study of Pelabresib in Myelofibrosis with Topline Results Expected by End of 2023 -... - April 5th, 2023
- VOR BIOPHARMA INC. Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations (form 10-K) - Marketscreener.com - March 25th, 2023
- BioRestorative Therapies to Seek FDA Approval to Expand the Clinical Application of BRTX-100 - Marketscreener.com - March 17th, 2023